To complete last
week’s post, I will offer here a summary of the history of Cosmology, from
the Greeks to the paradigm shift that took place in the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries.
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- Greek cosmology (with the
exception of Aristarchus of Samos) put the Earth at the center of the universe.
Plato and, above all, Aristotle established the idea that, since the sky
is perfect, the orbits of the planets must be exactly circular, because, for
them, the circumference is the most perfect curve of all.
- The Greek model explained well the movements of the sun and moon, and therefore made it possible to predict eclipses, but had a problem with the retrograde movements of the planets then known (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn). Three centuries before Christ, Apollonius of Pergamum proposed that the orbits of these planets are epicycles, circumferences centered on another circumference (the deferent), which in turn revolves around a point located near the Earth, but apart from its center (the eccentric).